Thousands attend memorial service for Chelsea King

Thousands of people attended the memorial for the 17-year-old girl whose murder has shaken her community and spurred calls for legal changes in how child sex offenders are treated. (AP Photo/Denis Poroy)

Brent King, left, Kelly King, right, and Tyler King, center, look back towards the crowd as they leave a memorial service held at Poway High School for Chelsea King Saturday March 13, 2010, in Poway, Calif.

Members of the Poway High School soccer team arrive at a memorial service held at Poway High School for teenager Chelsea King Saturday March 13, 2010, in Poway, Calif.

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POWAY, Calif. (AP) – Thousands of teachers, classmates and neighbors filled a high school football stadium Saturday to honor a 17-year-old girl whose body was discovered in a shallow, lakeside grave, allegedly killed by a registered sex offender.

Family and friends told the crowd of Chelsea's big dreams, terrific sense of humor, sense of style, athleticism and thirst for knowledge and adventure.

They were profusely thankful for the massive search for her after she went missing Feb. 25 on a run at a San Diego Park and for the outpouring of sympathy after her body was found five days later.

Speakers also said her heinous death has galvanized people to prevent other children from falling victim to predators. A moment of silence was held for Amber Dubois, whose bones were found a last week north of San Diego more than a year after she went missing while walking to school.

"Chelsea was a force who was setting out to change the world," said Cindy Provenzano, a family friend. "She did not die in vain and neither did Amber Dubois."

John Gardner, 30, has pleaded not guilty to Chelsea's murder and attempted rape of another woman in December. He is also a suspect but has not been charged in the killing of Amber Dubois.

Gardner served five years of a six-year sentence for molesting a 13-year-old neighbor in 2000. He was on parole for three years, until September 2008.

"Sometimes we just get sick and tired of the brokenness in this world," Harry Kuehl, pastor of the Church of Rancho Bernardo, said during Saturday's ceremony.

The program featured scanned images of papers that Chelsea posted on her bathroom mirror, with famous quotations in her own writing. One was from Eleanor Roosevelt: "The future belongs to those who believe in the beauty of her dreams."

Chelsea was a straight-A student at Poway High School ran on the cross-country team, played French horn in the San Diego Youth Symphony and was active in her school's peer counseling program. She was a tireless volunteer in school and community activities, whether working at a prom for special education students or packaging food for needy families in Africa.

She had applied to 11 colleges and aspired to a career that would combine her interests in writing and the environment.

A makeshift memorial outside the school with letters addressed to Chelsea showed how her life and death have touched Poway, a wealthy San Diego suburb.

"I'll never forget how much you have shaped the person I am today," wrote one friend.

Another friend recalled how upset Chelsea was after a breakup with her boyfriend in sophomore year.

"I'm glad my last moments with you were laughing and sharing stories," the friend wrote. "You brought tears to many but I know it's because you had such a big impact on many people and we really care about you," the friend wrote.

One stranger wrote about desperately wishing to have met Chelsea.

"You wanted to change the world and you did, you brought our whole community together," the message read.

Students have wrapped ribbons around 8,000 sunflowers to hand out at the service.